Litcius/Paper detail

Associations Between Aggregate NLP-Extracted Conflicts of Interest and Adverse Events by Drug Product

S. Scott Graham, Zoltan P. Majdik, Johua B. Barbour, Justin F. Rousseau

2022Studies in health technology and informatics16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study evaluates associations between aggregate conflicts of interest (COI) and drug safety. We used a machine-learning system to extract and classify COI from PubMed-indexed disclosure statements. Individual conflicts were classified as Type 1 (personal fees, travel, board memberships, and non-financial support), Type 2 (grants and research support), or Type 3 (stock ownership and industry employment). COI were aggregated by type compared to adverse events by product. Type 1 COI are associated with a 1.1-1.8% increase in the number of adverse events, serious events, hospitalizations, and deaths. Type 2 COI are associated with a 1.7-2% decrease in adverse events across severity levels. Type 3 COI are associated with an approximately 1% increase in adverse events, serious events, and hospitalizations, but have no significant association with adverse events resulting in death. The findings suggest that COI policies might be adapted to account the relative risks of different types of financial relationships.

Topics & Concepts

Adverse effectStock (firearms)Product typeProduct (mathematics)MedicineActuarial scienceBusinessComputer scienceInternal medicineHistoryGeometryArchaeologyProgramming languageMathematicsPharmaceutical industry and healthcarePharmaceutical Economics and PolicyHealthcare cost, quality, practices